Leadership in American Medicine

Abstract
There is today no subject. . . that deserves and will require more careful, exhaustive, dispassionate and unprejudiced study than social insurance, or that will, whatever the final conclusions, demand greater tact, diplomacy and good judgment in practical handling. It is, therefore, of the utmost importance that physicians both as individuals and organizations abandon the attitude of unreasoning opposition which has characterized many of our professional discussions on this question and make an honest effort to study the problems involved and to arrive at conclusions which can be justified. . . By the end of another year the question may . . .